NoelC wrote:Why do you think spikes are bad?
From a scientific standpoint, diffraction spikes are bad because they represent energy in the wrong place, and because they obscure detail.
For one thing, they help positively locate the star position in a brilliant blob of white-out.
Scientifically, you are better off with the blob. I know of no astrometric technique which relies on using diffraction spikes.
For another, they help differentiate a bright star from a bright galaxy if both create a blob of white-out.
Again, from an analysis standpoint, there are better ways.
Lastly, they're beautiful!
This is the important statement. Whether one prefers images with diffraction (as you do) or without (as I do), this is a matter of aesthetics. I don't know any professional astronomer who wouldn't be happy to get rid of such artifacts if it didn't result in tradeoffs that damaged the data worse than the diffraction does. It's easy for amateurs to choose, because at small apertures they can use refractors or SCTs and avoid diffraction spikes. Not so easy when you get up into the meter and larger ranges, though.